Kinematics of deformation (Continuum mechanics)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on solving a problem from "Continuum mechanics and thermodynamics," specifically regarding the kinematics of deformation. The initial focus is on deriving the differential position vector between two material points at time t, starting from their positions in the initial configuration. Participants explore the application of the gradient and product rules to express this relationship in terms of the function f(R,t). A key point raised is that the radial unit vector remains constant, leading to a simplified expression for the differential position vector. The conversation then shifts to considering the deformation gradient tensor and its implications for the r-r component.
Jinjolee
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Homework Statement
Calculating the deformation gradient, velocity field and acceleration field of a cavity motion
Relevant Equations
F=grad(x)
J=det(F)
v=dx/dt
A=dv/dt
Question is extracted from "Ellad B Tadmor, Ronald E Miller, Ryan S Elliott - Continuum mechanics and thermodynamics From fundamental concepts to governing equations".
I just got stuck at part (a). I think if part(a) is solved, I may be able to do the other parts.
 

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What have you done so far?
 
Chestermiller said:
What have you done so far?
I tried to do grad(x) = $$grad(\frac {f(R,t)}{R} X)$$
and by product rules:
=$$\frac{f(R,t)}{R} ∇X + X ⋅ ∇(\frac {f(R,t)}{R})$$
If I am correct, ∇X should be I, so
=$$\frac{f(R,t)}{R} I + X ⋅ ∇(\frac {f(R,t)}{R})$$
This is by far what I have done.
 
Let's try this a little differently. Suppose, in the initial configuration, you have two material points at R and R+dR connected by a differential position vector $$\mathbf{dX}=dR\mathbf{i_r}$$ In terms of f(R,t), what is the differential position vector between these same two material points at time t?
 
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Chestermiller said:
Let's try this a little differently. Suppose, in the initial configuration, you have two material points at R and R+dR connected by a differential position vector $$\mathbf{dX}=dR\mathbf{i_r}$$ In terms of f(R,t), what is the differential position vector between these same two material points at time t?
I this it should apply $$dx=x(X+dX)-x(X)$$
But I am not sure about the answer. Is it$$\frac{f(R+dR{\mathbf{i_r}},t)}{R+dR\mathbf{i_r}}(R\mathbf{i_r}+dR\mathbf{i_r})-\frac{f(R,t)}{R}R\mathbf{i_r}$$?
 
Jinjolee said:
I this it should apply $$dx=x(X+dX)-x(X)$$
But I am not sure about the answer. Is it$$\frac{f(R+dR{\mathbf{i_r}},t)}{R+dR\mathbf{i_r}}(R\mathbf{i_r}+dR\mathbf{i_r})-\frac{f(R,t)}{R}R\mathbf{i_r}$$?
No. You may be overthinking it. The quantity ##\frac{\mathbf{X}}{R}## is the unit vector in the radial spherical coordinate direction ##\mathbf{i_r}## (which is constant). So the differential position vector between the same two material points at time t is $$\mathbf{dx}=\mathbf{i_r}df=\frac{\partial f}{\partial R}(\mathbf{i_r}dR)$$What does that tell you about the r-r component of the deformation gradient tensor ##\mathbf{F}##?
Next, let's consider a differential position vector between two material points that are initially oriented in the ##\theta## polar coordinate direction: $$\mathbf{dX}=(Rd{\theta})\mathbf{i_{\theta}}$$In terms of f(R,t), what is the differential position vector between this same pair of material points at time t?
 
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